J-Zone
J-Zone | |
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Birth name | Jay Mumford |
Born | 1976 (age 39–40) |
Origin | Queens, New York City |
Genres | Alternative hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, producer, writer |
Years active | 1993–present |
Labels | Old Maid Entertainment, Fat Beats |
Associated acts | Prince Po, Cage, Celph Titled |
Website |
www |
Jay Mumford, better known by his stage name J-Zone,[1] is a rapper, producer and writer from New York City.[2]
Career
Known for his quirky lyrics and trash talk style of rapping, J-Zone released a string of idiosyncratic and critically acclaimed albums in the late 1990s and early 2000s that acquired a cult following.[3][4] Of these, the 2001 release Pimps Don't Pay Taxes, was particularly noted; it featured rappers Huggy Bear and Al-Shid,[2] for whom he would subsequently produce a number of 12" releases.[5] In 2003, the New York Times cited his J-Zone, S.A. Smash concert in Brooklyn, New York as a noteworthy pop and jazz concert in the New York metropolitan region.[6]
Not finding commercial success, J-Zone eventually walked away from rap, and in 2011 published the book Root for the Villain: Rap, Bullshit and a Celebration of Failure.[2][4] The book has been well received; the L.A. Times Music Blog stated that "Like his albums, it's equal parts hilarious, self-effacing and sharp. He's the sarcastic older brother putting you up on game. It's a love letter to rap laced with sulfur, the flip side of Dan Charnas' similarly excellent The Big Payback."[1] The Washington Post Going Out Gurus blog called it "a must for every curmudgeonly grown-up hip-hop head",[4] while Nathan Rabin writing for The A.V. Club called it "one of the funniest and most honest books ever written about the modern music industry and its luckless casualties."[2]
In 2013, J-Zone returned to music with the release of the album Peter Pan Syndrome,[7] which was listed as the 17th best album of 2013 by SPIN Magazine.[8] After learning to play drums seriously during his hiatus from music, J-Zone released the drum break album, Lunch Breaks, in 2014.[9] The follow-up, Backyard Breaks, was released in 2015. A handful of singles were also released in 2014 and 2015.
Discography
Albums
- Music for Tu Madre (1998)
- Pimps Don't Pay Taxes (2001)
- $ick of Bein' Rich (2003)
- A Job Ain't Nuthin but Work (2004)
- Gimme Dat Beat Fool: The J-Zone Remix Project (2005)
- To Love a Hooker: The Motion Picture Soundtrack (2007)
- Peter Pan Syndrome (2013)
- Lunch Breaks (2014)
- Backyard Breaks (2015)
- Fish N' Grits (2016)
EPs
- A Bottle of Whup Ass (2000)
- The 1993 Demos EP (2013)
Singles
- "No Consequences" (2000)
- "Zone for President" (2000)
- "Q&A" (2002)
- "5 Star Hooptie" (2003)
- "Choir Practice" (2003)
- "A Friendly Game of Basketball" (2004)
- "Greater Later Remix" (2005)
- "The Drug Song (Remix)" b/w "The Fox Hunt" (2012)
- "Zonestitution" (2013)
- "Stick Up" b/w "Mad Rap" (2014)
- "I Smell Smoke" b/w "Time for a Crime Wave" (2015)
- "Seoul Power" b/w "I'm Sick of Rap" (2015)
Guest appearances
- Princess Superstar - "I Love You (or at Least I Like You)" from Princess Superstar Is (2001)
- Jehst - "Staircase to Stage" from The Return of the Drifter (2002)
- Danger Mouse & Jemini the Gifted One - "Take Care of Business" from Ghetto Pop Life (2003)
- Apathy & Celph Titled - "Nut Reception" from No Place Like Chrome (2006)
Productions
- Cage - "Stoney Lodge" from Movies for the Blind (2002)
- Cage - "Too Much (Remix)" from Weatherproof (2003)
- Biz Markie - "Chinese Food" from Weekend Warrior (2003)
- Leak Bros. - "G.O.D." from Waterworld (2004)
- 7L & Esoteric - "Neverending Saga" from DC2: Bars of Death (2004)
- MF Grimm - "Dancin'" from Digital Tears: E-mail from Purgatory (2004)
- R.A. the Rugged Man - "Brawl" from Die, Rugged Man, Die (2004)
- Prince Po - "It's Goin' Down" and "Meet Me at the Bar" from The Slickness (2004)
- Casual - "Say That Then" and "Hieroller" from Smash Rockwell (2005)
- Awol One - "This Far" from The War of Art (2006)
- Juggaknots - "Crazy 8's" from Use Your Confusion (2006)
- Sadat X - "X Is a Machine" from Black October (2006)
- Apathy & Celph Titled - "S.M.D." from No Place Like Chrome (2006)
- Akrobatik - "Absolute Value" from Absolute Value (2008)
- Del the Funky Homosapien - "Funkyhomosapien" from Eleventh Hour (2008)
- The Lonely Island - "Santana DVX" from Incredibad (2009)
- Mr. Lif - "Gun Fight" from I Heard It Today (2009)
- CunninLynguists - "Cocaine" from Strange Journey Volume Two (2009)
- Canibus - "Free Words" from C of Tranquility (2010)
Bibliography
- Root for the Villain: Rap, Bullshit, and a Celebration of Failure. Cambria Heights, NY, Old Maid Entertainment, 2011. ISBN 978-0-615-53227-1
References
- 1 2 Weiss, Jeff, Rap & Books: Underground iconoclast J-Zone 'Roots for the Villain', Los Angeles Times, retrieved January 6, 2013
- 1 2 3 4 Rabin, Nathan, J-Zone lost his Wikipedia page—and his interest in being a rapper, The A.V. Club, retrieved January 6, 2013
- ↑ J-Zone lost his Wikipedia page—and his interest in being a rapper | Music | Money Matters | The A.V. Club
- 1 2 3 Hahn, Fritz, Nightlife Agenda: Holiday cocktails, rare beers and Nerd Nite, Washington Post, retrieved January 6, 2013
- ↑ J-Zone * New Music And Songs * MTV, MTV, 2012, retrieved January 6, 2013
- ↑ Sanneh, Kelefa, Pop and Jazz Guide, New York Times, p. E23, retrieved January 6, 2013
- ↑ "J-Zone’s ‘Peter Pan Syndrome’: The Grumpy-Old-Man Rap You Need in Your Life | SPIN". Spin. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
- ↑ "J-Zone, Peter Pan Syndrome (Old Maid) SPIN". www.spin.com. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
- ↑ "J-Zone learns the drums and drops Lunch Breaks". Wax Poetics. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
Further reading
- Miller, Matthew, Music: J-Zone – Queens rapper is cheap and nasty...and pretty funny, too, Lansing State Journal, p. 6, retrieved January 6, 2013
- Reed, James, Hip-hop rulers combine kingdoms. Jay-Z and Kanye's 'Throne' album and tour show the power of the genre, Boston Globe, p. 22, Living Arts section, retrieved January 6, 2013
External links
- Official website
- J-Zone on Twitter
- J-Zone discography at Discogs
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